26 S.E. 936 | N.C. | 1897
Lunsford A. Paschal, administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Robert Harrison, filed a petition against the widow of the testator and his children, heirs at law, among whom were the plaintiffs in this action, for the purpose of obtaining a decree of sale of the tract of land which is the subject of this action, to make assets for the payment of the debts of the decedent. The decree of sale was made on 3 December, 1870, by the clerk of the court, and in the decree there was a recital, in substance, that personal service of the summons had been made upon defendants in the following words: "That the nonresident defendant, George Harrison, has been duly notified by publication to appear and answer, etc., and that the resident defendants have been duly served with process summoning them to appear and answer." The pleadings show that George Harrison, one of the children and heirs at law of the testator and one of the defendants in the above-mentioned proceedings, was a non-resident of the State of North. Carolina at the time of filing the petition, and that the other defendants in that proceeding, including the plaintiffs in this action, were residents of the State. The defendant's testator and devisor was the purchaser of the land at the sale by Pascal, the administrator of Robert Harrison. A report of the sale was made and in due time confirmed. The proceedings, from the decree of sale to the final decree confirming the (98) sale and ordering the title to be made to the purchaser inclusive, were regular in all respects.
The plaintiffs, in 1887, after the death of their mother, instituted this action to recover possession of the tract of land, claiming the same as devisees under the will of their father, Robert Harrison.
At the time of the commencement of this action the defendant, testator and devisor, T. L. Hargrove, was living, and in his answer to the complaint of the plaintiffs, set up as a defense the deed of the administrator, Pascal, to him, and the decree of the Court ordering the sale, and which recited that personal service of the summons had been made on the defendants in the special proceedings, among whom the plaintiffs in this action were included, and also the decree confirming the sale. The plaintiffs, finding these decrees in the special proceeding in their way and apprehending that they could not proceed with the action as long as those decrees should remain in existence, made a motion in the special proceeding, under which the land was sold, to set aside and vacate the order of sale on the ground that no service of summons had ever been made upon them in that proceeding, and that they had made no appearance in said proceeding, or had any notice thereof. The Clerk heard this motion and from his ruling there was an appeal, which was heard by Judge Graves, who, after finding the facts, rendered judgment in the following words: *67
"It is considered by the Court as a matter of legal inference, that the purchasers at the administrator's sale had notice of the order of the sale and of the want of proper advertising of sale. Therefore, it is considered and adjudged by the Court that the said order of sale, made on 3 December, 1870, was irregular and not according to the course of the Court as to the persons named as defendants, towit, Rebecca Harrison, Judith W. Harrison, Nancy Dement, formerly (99) Nancy Harrison, and Mary Harrison, and is void as to them; and that the same be cancelled and vacated as to them by this order, and that all the orders heretofore made in this action shall be allowed to remain upon the records for the purpose of protecting purchasers and others so far as in law they afford protection. It is further considered that the movers recover their costs." From this judgment the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court.
The appeal was heard at the February Term, 1890, and is reported in
The action then came on for trial before Judge Coble, from whose ruling and judgment the present appeal comes. His Honor charged the jury, in substance, that the purchaser at the administrator's sale (the defendant's testator and devisor) was protected by the decree under which the land was sold — the decree having recited that personal service of the summons had been made upon the defendants in the special *68 proceeding for the sale of the land, and that the administrator, in his deed, conveyed to the purchaser a good title to the land, and that there was no evidence before the Court that the purchaser had notice at the time of the purchase and confirmation of the sale that the defendants had not been served with summons. The language of his Honor is as follows: "But the Court instructs the jury that the decree under which the deed to T. L. Hargrove was made can not be treated as having been set aside so as to affect the right of the defendants who claim under T. L. Hargrove, deceased, who purchased at the sale, unless at the time he purchased and took his deed he had notice in point of fact that the plaintiffs in this action, who were defendants in the proceeding in which the order of sale was made, had not been served with process; and there is no evidence that said Hargrove had such notice. Wherefore the Court instructs the jury that the deed from Pascal, administrator of Harrison, passed to T. L. Hargrove whatever title said Harrison had in the land in controversy, and if the jury believe the evidence, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover, and the jury are instructed that if they believe the evidence they will answer the first, second, and third issues `No.'"
That instruction and the exception to it by the defendants present the only point necessary to be discussed and decided in this case. On (101) the latter section of this instruction it can be said, once for all, that there was no error in his Honor's instruction. In Judge Graves' findings of fact, when he vacated the decree of sale in the special proceeding, he did not find that the purchaser, Hargrove, had notice that the summons had not been served upon the defendants. He found, as a fact, that the summons had not been served upon the defendants, but he did not find that the purchaser had notice of this failure of service of the summons; and there is not a word of testimony appearing anywhere that the purchaser had any such notice. It is contended for the plaintiffs that the judgment of Judge Graves vacating the decree for the sale of the land made in the special proceeding is absolute in its meaning, and that the apparently restrictive words at the end of the judgment, towit, "and that all the orders heretofore made in this action shall be allowed to remain upon the record for the purpose of protecting purchasers and others so far as in law they afford protection," refer only to the purchaser's right of George Harrison's interest (he being a non-resident defendant and served with summons by publication in the special proceeding), and not to the interest of the defendant Hargrove, in his purchase of the interest of the other defendants; and, that as a legal consequence, the deed of the Administrator Pascal to Hargrove, the purchaser, passed no title. If it be conceded that the judgment of Judge Graves does not have the effect to vacate and reverse, unqualifiedly, the decree of sale, then, we are face to face with the question: Is the defendant, whose *69 testator and devisor was the purchaser under the decree of sale, protected under the decree which recited that personal service of the summons had been made upon the defendants in the rights acquired by the purchaser under that decree, and under the deed made to him by virtue of that decree, notwithstanding it has been since made to appear that (102) personal service of summons of the defendant was in point of fact not made? The judgment of Judge Graves was based, as we have said, on the ground that the defendants in the special proceeding for the sale of the land (the plaintiffs here) had not been served with summons, nor had they made any appearance therein. This matter we will now discuss.
The court (Probate Court) at the time the petition for the sale of the land was filed by the administrator, Pascal, and when the decrees were made (1870) had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the persons interested in the land. The decree of sale, upon its face, was perfectly regular in all respects, and recited the fact that the summons had been served on the defendants. It can not be insisted that this decree was a void or irregular judgment. It was perfectly regular on its face. InDoyle v. Brown,
The counsel of the plaintiffs, no doubt being aware of these decisions, acted under them, and, as we have said, moved in the original special proceeding to vacate and set aside the decree of sale of the land. In the argument before this Court, however, they insisted on both views — that the judgment was void, as well as voidable. We have seen that the decree of sale was valid and conclusive until the impeaching order of Judge Graves was made. Now, if we treat the Graves judgment as unqualifiedly adjudging the decree of sale void and set aside, what effect will this Court give to that judgment in so far as the rights of the purchaser, at the sale of the land under the decree in the special proceeding, are concerned? We think that the decisions of our Court settle the question, and that they are in favor of the defendant.
In Chambers v. Brigman,
In Sutton v. Schonwald,
In Morris v. Gentry,
In England v. Garner,
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to pass upon the other exceptions in the case. There was no error in the ruling and judgment of the Court below, and the same is
Affirmed.
Cited: Morrison v. Craven, post 330; McCauley v. McCauley,
(107)